View of Mt. Colden from the slopes of Boundary Peak (winter)
Hiking toward Algonquin Peak in the dark, morning
Moon sits above the evergreens an MacIntyre Brook in the early morning
Stay right toward Wright Peak, Algonquin Peak
Photo of the trailhead map to Iroquois Peak
Left-hand turn
Stay right
MacIntyre Falls frozen in the Winter (approx. 40-feet tall)
Snow-covered evergreens with sap-filled ice hanging on boulders off-trail
Ice scramble in the winter (8-feet tall)
View towards Whiteface Mountain from the trail, above the ice scramble pitch
Past the ice scramble pitch with views of Algonquin Peak
View of MacNaughton Mountain (middle) in the distance
Hiking up the very steep Algonquin Peak slopes
View toward Whiteface Mountain area from the super steep Algonquin Peak slopes
View of Wright Peak
Icicles hang off of spruce trees on Algonquin Peak
View toward Whiteface Mountain from the slopes of Algonquin Peak
Steep alpine terrain begins along Algonquin Peak
View of Wright Peak and Adirondack Mountains in the distance
Steep slopes of Algonquin Peak
Hikers ascending Algonquin Peak with stunning views of the Adirondack Mountains
Snow-covered rock cairn
Views of the Adirondack Mountains High Peaks Wilderness from Algonquin Peaks steep slopes
View with snow-covered rock cairn on Algonquin Peak
Cresting the summit of Algonquin Peak with Mt. Marcy in the distance
View toward Iroquois Peak
Algonquin Peak summit view of Mt. Marcy and Mt. Colden
View of Mt. Colden and Mt. Marcy from Algonquin Peak
View of Boundary Peak (middle) and Iroquois Peak (far) from the slopes of Algonquin Peak
View of Boundary Peak
Right-hand turn to reach Boundary Peak
Snowshoeing through the half-buried spruce trees
Snow-buried spruce trees - ascending Boundary Peak
View of Mt. Colden and Mt. Marcy with snow-buried spruce trees
View of Algonquin Peak from the Boundary Peak col / saddle
View of Algonquin Peak and Whiteface Mountain from the Boundary Peak col / saddle
Wind-swept snow-covered spruce trees
Boundary Peak summit (view of Mt. Colden and Mt. Marcy)
Boundary Peak summit
View of Iroquois Peak from Boundary Peak
View of Wallface Mountain
View of Algonquin Peak and Whiteface Mountain from Boundary Peak
View of Algonquin Peak from Boundary Peak
View of Iroquois Peak
Snow-covered spruce trees with views of the Adirondack Mountains in the distance
Looking up Iroquois Peak from the Iroquois-Boundary Peak col / saddle
View of snow-buried spruce trees in the col, Mt. Colden, and Mt. Marcy from the slopes of Iroquois Peak
View ascending Iroquois Peak along the steep rocky terrain
Iroquois Peak summit
View of Algonquin Peak, Boundary Peak, and surrounding mountains from Iroquois Peak
View of Mt. Colden and Mt. Marcy from Iroquois Peak summit
View of Wallface Mountain from Iroquois Peak summit
Dave on Iroquois Peak summit
MyHikes sticker summit of Iroquois Peak
View of the Adirondack Mountains from Iroquois Peak summit
View of Mt. Colden, Mt. Marcy, and the Great Range of the Adirondack Mountains
View of Algonquin Peak and Boundary Peak from the slopes of Iroquois Peak
View of Algonquin Peak and Adirondack Mountains
View of Mt. Colden and Mt. Marcy from Boundary Peak's slopes
View of the Adirondack Mountains from the Algonquin-Boundary Peaks col / saddle
Snow-buried spruce trees
Snow-covered trail rock cairns on Boundary Peak
Snow-covered trail rock cairn near Boundary Peak's summit
Snow-covered, wind-swept rock cairn. Almost shaped like Shawarma
View of Boundary Peak and Iroquois Peak from Algonquin Peak
Dave on Algonquin Peak's summit (view of Mt. Colden and Mt. Marcy)
View of Whiteface Mountain, Pitchoff Mountain, Cascade Mountain, and many other Adirondack peaks
Algonquin Peak summit
Stunning view of Wright Peak, Whiteface Mountain, and other Adirondack Mountains from Algonquin Peak's slopes
View of Wallface Mountain from Algonquin Peaks slopes
Hiking back into the tree line from Algonquin Peak
Descending the 8-foot ice pitch
*Some features have limitations without a Supporter account. Learn more.
I built MyHikes for myself and the hiking community.
100% grassroots & run by one person.
Trail info from hikers like you.
No investors. No intrusive ads.
Every donation fuels growth.